Thursday, May 11, 2006

The Smell of Money

When I was in China, I would often try to stay current with world news by either reading the Economist or Newsweek (International Edition). In one issue of Newsweek, there was a "perpective" article written by a former resident of a town in Iowa with a lot of pig farms around. The person recalls how her father and her would drive into town and the locals would sniff the air and smell the horrible odor of pig manure. Her father would take a particularly big whiff and then say, "Do you smell that? That's the smell of money."

Not all jobs are highly desirable, but after beginning the "Millionaire Mind" by Thomas J. Stanley, it seems that many millionaires tend to gravitate toward low competition, undesirable businesses with high profit margins. That's something you should keep in mind when choosing your own career path. Pigs, while stinky, often pay well.

But I digress. I was reminded of that article when I read this article today. Apparently scientists at the University of Illinois have found a way to convert pig manure into crude oil. That's right. Millions of tons of pig manure could potentially be transformed into oil and used in vehicles or other applications. Ain't technology great? I guess in the future, there will be one more way for that smell to be the "smell of money."

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